View Full Version : Trailer / Theater Dates for New, Restored Version of "The Texas Chain Saw Massacre"


JamesG
03-06-2014, 05:47 PM
SXSW: Tobe Hooper Talks About the New, Restored Version of The Texas Chain Saw Massacre -- EXCLUSIVE POSTER
by Clark Collis
Mar 6, 2014


On Monday, March 10, a forty-year-old terror will return to Austin, Tx., when a newly restored version of horror classic The Texas Chain Saw Massacre is screened at the SXSW Festival ahead of the movie’s theatrical re-release this summer.

“It’s great on the big screen,” says filmmaker Tobe Hooper, who co-wrote and directed the infamous 1974 film in the countryside outside of Austin, and also worked on the restoration.

“It’s in 7:1 sound that completely wraps around you and in 4K resolution. The film works as well, if not better, than it originally did.”









What exactly was your involvement in The Texas Chain Saw Massacre restoration process?

Working with the color grading, working with the 7:1 sound mix, working with very good people. It was the work a director should do to keep his film preserved.

I’m not tooting my own horn — well, I am — but there are other directors that saw the restoration and there is a great deal of excitement from them.




Who saw the new version?

I probably shouldn’t…Well, Ernest Dickerson, for one, who does "The Walking Dead".







I know you and [sound recordist] Wayne Bell worked very hard on the music for the film before its original release. The movie has such a strange soundtrack. I always imagined you being in a room with a lot of cymbals and a bag of spanners and just going somewhat insane.

It was very much like that, Clark. I mean it was broken kotos with contact mikes and aluminum bowls half-full of water. I used a lot of broken instruments, actually. Broken violins, broken bass. I mean, you’re right, your assessment.

There was a choral in the film. You’re hearing this howling that’s mixed into the music that is my voice making sounds down a three-foot cardboard tube into a contact microphone with Sony recorders to create reverberation. And sitting on the floor. The floor was my desk. I had the legs taken off the chair.




Did you use the legs as musical instruments?

Oh, I’m sure I did. Anything I could get to make a good sound I would use. I’m quite surprised how much I like it in 7:1. There are theories that films like this are best in mono because it draws your attention forward.

But this was designed to draw your attention all over the place. The sound fills your head.







Most low budget horror movies aren’t that impressive from a cinematographic standpoint, whereas The Texas Chain Saw Massacre is a terrific-looking movie. How did you manage to do that, given the film’s tiny budget?

Well, it was my second feature, and I’d shot a lot of documentaries and television commercials. So I had quite a lot of experience. I came into it knowing exactly what I wanted and I did have an excellent director of photography [Daniel Pearl], who was just out of film school. So he and I together got the look down.







As I’m sure you know, there is a remake of Poltergeist coming down the pipe and it looks like another of your films, Lifeforce, is being turned into a TV show. Are you involved in either of those two projects?

No. [Laughs] I did not know about Lifeforce, but I know about Poltergeist — this does not surprise me.




Sometimes it seems like cinemas are full of nothing but remakes of horror films by yourself and John Carpenter.

Yeah, I know. [Chuckles] Is that a compliment? I guess it is.

http://insidemovies.ew.com/2014/03/06/sxsw-texas-chain-saw-massacre-tobe-hooper/

JamesG
06-13-2014, 04:51 PM
Texas Chain Saw Massacre Re-Release Trailer: EXCLUSIVE NSFW VIDEO
by Clark Collis
June 13, 2014


Forty years after it scared the pants off America — and territories beyond — Tobe Hooper’s ultimate scare machine The Texas Chain Saw Massacre is returning to the big screen this summer in freshly restored form.

Hooper himself worked on the restoration and recently told Entertainment Weekly “the film works as well, if not better, than it originally did.”



Will the filmmaker’s classic tale of cannibalistically-inclined lunatics and the college-age kids they try to turn into barbecue wow a new generation of cinemagoers? That remains to be seen.

But we can say that, four decades after Hooper and co-writer Kim Henkel first introduced us to Gunnar Hansen’s Leatherface and the rest of the film’s demented crew, the brutal trailer for the restored Texas Chain Saw Massacre is not one for the faint of heart nor weak of stomach.







You will find both that trailer and the list of dates that the souped-up TCSM will debut around the country below:


June 21
New York, Film Society of Lincoln Center


June 27
New York, IFC Center


June 27
Boston, Coolidge Corner


July 11
Portland, Hollywood Theatre
Houston, Alamo Drafthouse Cinema
Kalamazoo, MI, Alamo Drafthouse Cinema
Winchester, VA, Alamo Drafthouse Cinema
Washington, DC, Alamo Drafthouse Cinema


July 18
Austin, TX, Alamo Drafthouse Cinema (Slaughter Lane)
Littleton, CO, Alamo Drafthouse Cinema
Winston-Salem, NC, a/perture
Eugene, OR, Bijou Metro
Tulsa, OK, Circle Cinema


July 19
Yonkers, NY, Alamo Drafthouse Cinema


July 25
Kansas City, MO, Alamo Drafthouse Cinema


July 25
Lubbock, TX, Alamo Drafthouse Cinema
New Braunfels, TX, Alamo Drafthouse Cinema
San Antonio, TX, Alamo Drafthouse Cinema (Westlakes)
Nashville, TN, Belcourt


August 1
Seattle, WA, SIFF Cinema

http://insidemovies.ew.com/2014/06/13/texas-chainsaw-massacre-rerelease-trailer/